Lost Catalpa

by Stephen Petroff

All I will say of that great tree is that it has been cut down.
I went for a visit and found it gone.
I was determined not to be stalled
by a death so large and sudden.
In the late afternoon, I went home
and continued my activities, as ever.
My first business was to make a pot of black tea.

As evening fell, a great deal of water fell,
from the sky, rain water.
I was suggestible: The tea tasted of rain.
As I drank from my old cup,
I listened at my open window:
I heard individual rain drops fall,
and I heard the things the raindrops hit:
a woodshed roof,
a piece of plywood propped under the eaves,
the leaves of the crabapple tree,
the leaves of the peach tree.

I flew the length of the ravine behind my house,
“using only my ears as wings,”
and I heard short bursts of sharp rain,
I heard the raindrops hit every bush and stone.
It was the kind of night I love,
but I wasn’t satisfied with it.

I would never deliberately complain about
how much I suffer from selfpity,
yet with the loss of this great catalpa tree,
I have dreamt of becoming Evil.
I knew that the rain was best for me:
I wanted to listen, rather than speak.
I listened to the storm and drank tea.
All the same, there was the earlier image before me,
the great tree of my life, reduced to a stump.

When they saw down a large tree,
they saw it up, as well.
I always expect the sawedup tree
to look like a butchered ox,
but there is no red flesh,
no slabs of fat, no blood at all,
no empty chest cavity,
if there’s no treedisease, there is no empty torso,
just arms thrown wide, and that look of headlessness.
All the same, if someone would paint
a picture of the best section of a giant
(freshlykilled) catalpa tree, it would be
like one of the famous oil paintings
of a beefcritter’s hanging carcass
(Rembrandt and Soutine)
brush strokes aswirl on slaughtered wood,
wood swollen like muscle, muscle streaming with light /
light like living minerals /or powdered gold,
gold in a form that you could eat,
golden food for the conqueror of the tree /creation
that has sheltered whole families,
and who but the one devouring it,
can know if its flesh will be sweet or bitter?